Surgical strategy of biliary papillomatosis in Western countries

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Abstract

Surgical resection, considered the optimal treatment of biliary papillomatosis, often remains incomplete due to high risk of recurrence in view of positive margins or recurrence on the remnant bile duct because of its multifocality. Resection of the whole biliary tree by liver transplantation and duodenopancreatectomy can be regarded as the only curative treatment. However, this approach has resulted in unfavorable results in patients with advanced tumor invasion and/or positive lymph nodes. For the majority of biliary tumors, preoperative assessment is often insufficient. Therefore, we advocate initial partial resection as a first step to eliminate both advanced tumor invasion and/or positive lymph nodes on definitive analysis of the specimen. We propose the strategy of initial resection for selecting the patients who would actually benefit from liver transplantation. © Japanese Society of Hepato-Biliary-Pancreatic Surgery and Springer 2009.

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Vibert, E., Dokmak, S., & Belghiti, J. (2010). Surgical strategy of biliary papillomatosis in Western countries. Journal of Hepato-Biliary-Pancreatic Sciences, 17(3), 241–245. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00534-009-0151-1

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